New South Wales

World Heritage Values

The Willandra Lakes Region was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1981. The original boundary of the World Heritage Property was modified and reduced to its current size in 1995 in order to better define the area containing the World Heritage values. The World Heritage criteria current in 1981 and against which the Willandra Lakes Region was listed remain the formal criteria for this property. The World Heritage criteria are periodically revised and the criteria against which the property was listed in 1981 are not necessarily identical with the current criteria.

The region was inscribed on the World Heritage List for both outstanding cultural and natural universal values:

Natural

as an outstanding example representing the major stages in the earth's evolutionary history; and

Criteria

Outstanding example representing a major stage of the earth's evolutionary history.

The Willandra Lakes Region represents major stages of the earth's geological history, particularly associated with the response to major glacial-interglacial fluctuations. The World Heritage values include:

Unique cultural tradition.

The Willandra Lakes Region demonstrates an exceptional sequence of Aboriginal cultural occupation extending over tens of thousands of years, including an outstanding record of human responses to major changes over time in climate and environments (e.g. due to increasing aridity). The World Heritage values include:

extensive intact lakeshore landforms that may contain extensive archaeological and palaeontological materials; and

the remains of hearths, including those with considerable antiquity, which have provided an ideal source for palaeomagnetic measurements;

archaeological sites which occur within stratified sedimentary sequences and provide evidence for the antiquity and continuing presence of human occupation;

archaeological sites which contain evidence of utilisation of lacustrine resources during lake full phases, and rangeland resources during arid phases;

archaeological sites which demonstrate continuity of human occupation for the region through fluctuations in lake levels drying of the system about 15,000 years ago through the Holocene period and up to historic times;

archaeological sites which provide outstanding examples of hunting and gathering, a way of life that has dominated the Australian continent up to modern times, including:

evidence of human occupation of, and interaction with, the landscape of lakes, lunettes and sand dunes over time in the form of campsites, middens, fireplaces, quarries, knapping floors and burials; and

burial sites which are of global significance for the antiquity of burial practices represented and also for the information they provide on the development of human societies, including Pleistocene and Holocene burial sites; and

burial sites with associated mortuary goods and evidence of ritual burials that demonstrate the antiquity of particular burial practices and the development of religious beliefs and systems over time.